Climate change alters ocean chemistry much more than previously believed

Published: Friday, December 12, 2008, 14:34 [IST]

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Washington, Dec 12 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have discovered that the ocean's chemical makeup is less stable and more greatly affected by climate change than previously believed.

The research team, which included scientists from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology, report that during a time of climate change 13 million years ago the chemical makeup of the oceans changed dramatically.

The researchers warn that the chemical composition of the ocean today could be similarly affected by climate changes now underway, with potentially far-reaching consequences for marine ecosystems.

"As CO2 increases and weather patterns shift, the chemical composition of our rivers will change, and this will affect the oceans," said co-author Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology. "This will change the amount of calcium and other elements in ocean salts," he added.

The research team, which included Caldeira, Elizabeth M. Griffith and Adina Paytan of the University of California, Santa Cruz, plus two other colleagues, studied core samples of deep oceanic sediment recovered from the Pacific Ocean Basin.

By analyzing the calcium isotopes in grains of the mineral barite in different layers, they determined that between 13 and 8 million years ago the ocean's calcium levels shifted dramatically.

The shift corresponds to the growth of the Antarctic ice sheets during the same time interval.

Because of the huge volume of water that became locked up in the ice cap, the sea level also dropped.

"The climate got colder, ice sheets expanded, sea level dropped, and the intensity, type, and extent of weathering on land changed," explained Griffith.

"This caused changes in ocean circulation and in the amount and composition of what rivers delivered to the ocean," said Paytan. "This in turn impacted the biology and chemistry of the ocean," he added.

"What we learned from this work is that the ocean system is much more sensitive to climate change than we have previously appreciated," said Griffith.

According to Griffith, "We thought that the concentration of calcium, which is a major element in seawater, would change slowly and gradually over tens of millions of years."

"But what our data suggests is that there could be a more dynamic relationship between climate and ocean chemistry, which can sometimes result in rapid biogeochemical reorganization," he added. (ANI)